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Bibliography
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- Additional Information
Traceable Japanese publishers are in Tokyo unless indicated in the titles or in the publisher’s name. Many of the older publishers are no longer in business. Abe Kòzò. Nihon dorei-shi (History of slavery in Japan). Shûhòkaku, 1926. Aikens, C. Melvin. Review: Hudson, Ruins of Identity: Ethnogenesis in the Japanese Islands (1999). Asian Perspectives 39/1–2:194–196, 2000. ———, and Higuchi Takayasu. Prehistory of Japan. New York:Academic Press, 1982. Akimoto Kichirò, ed. Fudoki. Iwanami Shoten, 1966. Amakasu Ken. Kofun no shutsugen to tòitsu kokka no keisei (The emergence of old tombs and the formation of a unified state). Zusetsu Nihon rekishi 1. Shûeisha, 1974. Anazawa Wakou and Manome Jun’ichi. “Two inscribed swords from Japanese tumuli discoveries .” In Windows on the Japanese Past: Studies in Archaeology and Prehistory, ed. Richard Pearson. University of Michigan Press, 1986. Andò Masanao. “Yamatai-koku wa Fukuoka-ken Yamato-gun ni hizu” (Yamatai is not at Yamato county, Fukuoka prefecture). Rekishi kyòiku 2/5, 6, 7, 1927. Andò Norikazu. “Hisui” (Jade). In Jòmon bunka no kenkyû 8, ed. Katò Shinpei, Kobayashi Tatsuo, and Fujimoto Tsuyoshi. Repr., Yûzankaku, 1986. Andò Terukumi. Yamatai-koku to Toyo-òkoku (Yamatai and Toyo ruler’s polity). Osaka: Naniwasha, 1973. Aoki Keiichi. Yamatai no uriwashii hime (Beautiful queen of Yamatai). Mainichi Shimbunsha, 1971. Aoki, Michiko Y. Records of Wind and Earth: A Translation of Fudoki with Introduction and Commentaries. Monograph 53.Ann Arbor, Mich.:Association for Asian Studies, 1997. Aomori-ken Kyòiku Iinkai. Tareyanagi iseki (Tareyanagi site). Aomori-ken Kyòiku Iinkai, 1982. Arai Hakuseki. Gaikoku no koto chòsho (Recorded things of foreign countries). N.p., 1716. Arai Satoru. “Tokyo-to Kita-ku Tabata Fudòzaka iseki no kagami mainò ikò” (The buried mirror feature at the Tabata Fudòzaka site, Kita ward, Tokyo). Nihon kòkogaku 13:123–130, 2002. ArakiToshio. Nihon kodai no kòtaishi (Crown princes of ancient Japan).Yoshikawa Kòbunkan, 1985. Arimitsu Kyòichi. Chòsen masei sekken no kenkyû (Study of polished stone swords of Korea). Kyoto Daigaku Bungakubu Kòkogaku Sòsho, vol. 2. 1958. ——— et al. Sekai kòkogaku jiten (Dictionary of world archaeology).Vol. 2. Heibonsha, 1979. Asahigurafu. Kodai-shi hakkutsu: 1978–81 (Excavating ancient history). Asahi Shimbunsha, 1983. ———. Shin–kodai-shi: 1983–87 (New–ancient history: 1983–87).Asahi Shimbunsha, 1988. ———. Sengo 50-nen: kodai-shi hakkutsu somakuri (Fifty years after the war: General survey of excavating ancient history).Asahi Shimbunsha, 1996. ———. Kurozuka kofun to Yamato kofun-gun (Kurozuka old tomb and Yamato old tomb group).Asahi Shimbunsha, 1998. Asahi Shimbun Nara Shikyoku-hen. Yamanobe no michi (The road of Yamanobe). Sògensha, 1972. Asahi Shimbunsha. Yamatai-koku e no michi (The road to Yamatai). Fukuoka, 1980. ———. Nihon rettò hakkutsu-ten: 1988–89 (Exhibition of excavations on the Japanese archipelago : 1988–89).Asahi Shimbunsha 1989a. Bibliography 359 ———. Yoshinogari iseki-ten: Gishi Wajin-den no sekai (Exhibition of Yoshinogari site:The world of the Wei zhi).Asahi Shimbunsha 1989b. Asahi Shimbun Seibu Honsha. Yamatai-koku e no monko (The door to Yamatai). Fukuoka, 1983. Asakura Haruhiko, Inoguchi Shòji, Okano Hirohiko, and Matsumae Takeshi. Shinwa densetsu jiten (Dictionary of mythology and legends).Tokyodò, 1963. Aston, William G., trans. Nihongi (Chronicles of Japan from the earliest times to AD 697). 2 vols. Repr.,Tuttle, 1972. Baba Hisao. “Biological anthropology.” In Nihon-jin to Nihon bunka. Newsletter Special Issue. [Kyoto: Kokusai Nihon Bunka Kenkyû Senta?], 2000. Ban Nobutomo. Chûgai keiiden sòkò (Rough draft of domestic and foreign recondite writings ). Repr., Kokusho Kankò-kai, 1848. Barnes, Gina L. “Jiehao, tonghao: Peer relations in East Asia.” In Peer Polity Interaction and Socio-political Change, ed. Colin Renfrew and John F. Cherry. Cambridge University Press, 1986a. ———. “The structure of Yayoi and Haji ceramics.” In Windows on the Japanese Past: Studies in Archaeology and Prehistory, ed. Richard Pearson. University of Michigan Press, 1986b. ———. ProtohistoricYamato:Archaeology of the First Japanese State. Michigan Papers in Japanese Studies 17. University of Michigan Press, 1988. ———. “Ceramics of the Yayoi agriculturalists.” In The Rise of a Great Tradition: Japanese Archaeological Ceramics from the Jòmon through Heian Periods. New York: Agency for Cultural Affairs, Government of Japan; Japan Society, 1990. ———. China, Korea, and Japan: The Rise of Civilization in East Asia. London:Thames and Hudson, 1993. ———. “Archaeological armor in Korea and Japan: Styles, technology, and social setting.” Journal of East Asian Archaeology 2/3–4:61–95, 2000. Barnes, Gina, and M. Okita, eds. The Miwa Project Report...